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tv   Early Start  CNN  January 21, 2013 3:00am-4:00am PST

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for that evening of the ball. i wanted to do the inauguration. >> reporter: why? >> because that's the moment that the whole world is a part of. and the whole world was watching. >> reporter: which is why this time -- >> some people wanted to know, are you going to be a part of it? there's nothing more important than seeing someone else have this gift and what they do with it. >> reporter: alina cho, cnn, new york. >> he is down to two dresses, which one will she choose? stay with us all day to find out. so much going on. "early start" continues right now. so help you god. >> so help me god. >> it's official. and now they'll do it again for the people this time. president obama's second inauguration is just hours away. >> the crowd is growing and so is the excitement. some 800,000 people expected to assemble here on the national
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mall. we are right in the middle of it. >> and with the massive crowds come super tight security. a look at the incredible steps being taken to protect the president. also, grammy award winner john legend talks about america's war on drugs, and whether it's done more harm than good. also this hour, representative debbie wasserman schultz will join us at 6:00 a.m., along with jim clyburn, cory booker and senator john barraso and berniece king. at 8:00 a.m. eastern time, freshman representative. joakim castro. and nick cannon will join us. you are watching a personal spe edition of "early start." i'm soledad o'brien in washington, d.c. forb the inauguration of president barack
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obama. in our location, zoraida, not very far from where i am, but john and i are right on the capitol building. quite remarkable. really i think fair to say the best seat in the house in a few hours for people watching, of course, right, john, the president getting sworn in? >> i can look down and see you, right down there. right down there below me. hey, how are you? what's going on down there? >> zoraida. >> i'm going to turn around -- yeah. i can't get -- i can't get a view. i have to tell you, you guys, your shots are remarkable and amazing, that bird's eye view you have, berman, is beautiful. we are looking forward to that, having that view. >> when things get under way, and more people coming out to the mall. but at some point, something like 800,000 people between where we are on the capitol building and zoraida on the other end of the mall. a busy and pretty amazing day. in a few hours, in fact,
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president obama will do it again, publicly taking the oath of office. he begins his second term. doing it today on martin luther king day. the second time taking the oath in 24 hours. take a look. >> so help me god. >> congratulations, mr. president. >> thank you, mr. chief justice. thank you so much. >> very sweet. the first lady and daughters looking on. at one point, he said i did it. it is, of course, a constitutional requirement that the president be sworn in on january 20th. and the vice president joe biden did it again as well. we should expect a lot of pageantry, history in the making today. white house correspondent dan lothian following it all for us. dan, good morning. walk us through how today will go. >> good morning, soledad. the first chance to see the president and the first lady, the first family, in fact will, be this morning around 8:45 when they depart the white house, walk across the street to st. john's episcopal church, the
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church of the presidents. the first family has been there in the past. a couple of hours after that, they will head up to capitol hill for the swearing in ceremony, where the president and vice president will be sworn in for the public. some 800,000 people as you mentioned earlier, there to witness this event. then there will be a luncheon that will take place on the hill before the president gets a chance to at least deliver his inauguration speech which we're told this will be a hopeful speech, not one focused on policy where the president will talk about some of the challenges ahead, talk about getting the public engaged in pushing through his agenda in congress, and the first family will take part in the inaugural parade before watching rest of the parade from the viewing stand behind me.
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the public swearing in takes place after the official swearing in yesterday at the naval observatory. >> so help me god. >> so help me god. >> thank you, your honor. >> congratulations. >> that was the -- the vice president first and then the president sworn in here at the white house in the blue room, surrounded with some family members and friends. the big headline from that is no flubs this time. remember, four years ago, when the president and justice roberts, stepped on each other. there was a word faithfully out of place so they had to do a redo. no problems yesterday. >> thank you, dan. the turnout for the public inauguration is expected to be nowhere near the 1.8 million people who packed this mall four years ago. and christi paul on the natiol
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mall. they are expecting half the turnout, right, christi? >> right, but this is still half a million people. the south entrance to the mall has already been shut down. in the last hour, hour and a half, we're seeing more and more people come in. when you think about 900,000 people being here, one group of kids knew how to fin each other. did you buy them to get snnotic? >> we bought them to get noticed, but we thought we could wave them around to find everyone. >> they are here from montana and you can see something starting back there. but they were hoping that president would just give them a shoutout from montana. i learned there is a delegation from montana in the parade so
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they will get their shoutout either way. >> unlikely he will give a shoutout in the middle of apr o inaugural address, but the hats, maybe. >> john berman has been following some of the big, bold names. good morning. >> good morning, soledad. a washington's who's who. all of the powerful people. the most powerful, the families, the president family and the biden's. they will sit there. behind the obamas, the presidential guests, which could include cabinet members, close friends, maybe also big donors as well. former presidents jimmy carter, bill clinton, neither of the bushes coming. george h.w. bush still recovering from illness. you can see them setting up. putting name tags on the chairs. so everyone knows where to sit and laying out the official
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inauguration ceremony program. a lovely, lovely piece of paper right here. we got one ourselves. lays out the ceremonies that will be happening today in about six hours from now. zoraida. >> all right. thank you very much, john. president obama better get all of his partying done tonight. his second term is in full effect already and that means the potential for great achievements, but if history is any indicator, the second term is where things can get messy. it's not like he wasn't warned. >> i'm more than familiar with the literature about presidential overreach in second terms. >> president barack obama's victory dance is about to become a dance against destiny. >> if we look back, some really great examples of really big things being done in second terms. but recent history, there is the potential for real disaster. >> i did not have sexual
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relations with that woman. >> according to polls by the gallop organization, second term presidents often end up with second-rate approval numbers. just ask trent duffy, former president secretary to president george w. bush. >> major combat operations in iraq have ended. >> a president's approval ratings who dropped 25%. >> if poll numbers drop down below 50, you will see the white house press corps turn more hostile. planning to get as much done in the early portions of this term is key. >> mr. president, i'm grateful for this opportunity to serve our country again. >> obama faces nomination fights, a divided congress and there is this. >> the president will either rise or fall above the economy. >> obama is off to a head start with current approval rating higher than first-term average, but he faces fightsory gun
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control and immigration reform. >> this is when presidents get tested. unexpected things happen and they have to react almost in real time on the spot. this is when we get to see the true character of a president. >> in the dedication of a nation. >> reporter: just 16 presidents have been elected to a second term, including some of the great ones. obama, the 17th, will now get his shot at greatness or not. >> and one of the highlights of the presidential inauguration are these huge star-studded parties. we'll take you inside the exclusive events after this quick break and it looks like the party has already started behind me. we'll be right back.
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security levels always high at our nation's capital in washington, d.c., but nothing like today. roads shut down everywhere you turn. barricades, officers of all
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kinds set up to watch what's going on today. is seen and unseen. to give all the measures in place, here is brian todd. >> joe hagan remembers his first jolt, working security in an inauguration. january 2001, just after george w. bush's swearing in. >> turned down pennsylvania avenue, and the military aide in the right front seat of the car i was riding in, and turned around and said, sir there, is a gas mask under your seat. get ready to put it on. which is a little startling. >> reporter: to prepare for possible teargassing of protesters. and deputy white house chief of staff under george w. bush. hagin provided security to big events, summits, trips to war zones. hagin says the secret service,
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the lead security service for the inauguration, will make sure buildings are clear of potential snipers, manhole covers welded shut, s.w.a.t. teams over the city. plain clothes law enforcement lingering in the crowd. bomb-sniffing dogs, and teams trained on mass destruction. >> dive team, intelligence analysts will be working around the clock. our hostage negotiators. >> reporter: that fbi official spoke to us inside the multiagency communications center, real time monitoring of surveillance cameras posted on buildings and roads and share tips and incidenident reports. with checkpoints, monitoring stations and other precautions, this stage, the parade route along pennsylvania avenue, where the real unknown comes in. often along here where the president gets out of his car. that's when the president is most exposed and the crowds are massive. >> if he gets out of his car and
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walks, what's going through your mind at that moment? >> through my mind is having faith hain the plan and assumin that the agents are doing their job. >> reporter: haggin says the secret service o choreographs where he gets out of the limo and where he gets back in. when it's all over? a big sigh of relief. >> an event of this magnitude takes hundreds of thousands to execute effectively. and those people tend to not have a whole lot of fun. >> reporter: no matter how smoothly the day goes, security officials will conduct a thorough review of the event. brian todd, washington. >> live pictures of that parade route. look at that. security measures in place. barricades on the sides.
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empty, tempiempty streets in washington. waiting for festivities that happen all day long. you want to stay with cnn. we have action all day into the night. parties, celebrities, music, all of it, you want to watch our special coverage of the presidential inauguration, beginning tonight at 7:00. other news going on in the world with christine romans in new york. >> good morning, john. let's start in algeria, the exact death toll unknown after a fiery and bloody end to the hostage standoff. the gas complex was stormed, killing dozens of is halfic militants. more than 104 hostages were freed. at least one american is among the 23 confirmed dead. a 15-year-old boy facing murder charges after three young children and two adults found dead in a home outside albuquerque, new mexico. investigators describe a
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gruesome scene. police would not name the victims, but the house belongs to a popular local pastor named greg griego and his wife sarah. his brother confirms the pastor is among the dead. terrifying moments aboard a united express flight. flight 4480 blew out four tires when it touched down sunday night, causing veer off the runway. eight passengers, five crew members on board. it originated in rochester, new york. no injuries reported. to sports, the teams have been locked in for super bowl xlvii, the niners will take on the ravens. the nfc championship, and the ravens made easy work of the patriots, 28-13 victory to claim the afc title. for the first time, the super bowl will feature a battle of the brothers.
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john harbaugh will try to defeat his brother, 49ers head coach, jim harbaugh. >> interesting, interesting. thank you. of course, not just about the pomp and circumstance of today's inauguration. we're wondering what the president will say in his inaugural address. a closer look, straight ahead. special coverage of the presidential inauguration. back right after this. [ male an] from our nation's networks... ♪ ...to our city streets... ♪ ...to skies around the world... ♪ ...northrop grumman's security solutions are invisibly at work, protecting people's lives... [ soldier ] move out! [ male announcer ] ...without their even knowing it. that's the value of performance. northrop grumman.
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welcome back, everybody. you are watching special coverage of the presidential inauguration. we are joined to talk about a
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little bit about what we are expecting to hear. we've covered the gowns, the parties, the heart of the matter. second inaugural addresses are not necessarily known for being the best speeches. what do you expect to hear or hope to hear from the president in this inaugural address. >> die expe >> i do expect to hear a great speech. president obama is a greatera f -- great orator. i think he understand we are in a uniquely divided country, and i expect to hear unity. >> unity and hopeful are the only guiding principles we got about the speech. what else, roland? >> he needs to lay out the course in terms of where we are going, because economically, the last four years have been very difficult. a lot of people in this country,
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frankly, don't feel as optimistic about the future. i hope the president speaks to the people we often ignore. the poor, people busting their butts to make ends meet. he says we won't leave any american behind, just like we don't leave a soldier behind, we won't leave anybody out. and not about the middle class, upper class. about every american trying to prosper as best they can. >> you talk to people who help presidents write speeches, they say they do it with an eye to history and an eye to sort of the current day audience. but my question will be does it have to be true? having a flowery speech is one thing but -- >> you need one memorable line. we expect the one memorable line. if he can deliver that one
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memorable line, like the kennedy speech, it's what we'll all be talking about line. >> we remember the one line in the kennedy speech. we don't remember jack from johnson, nixon, reagan. you go up the line. >> we don't have that kin of attention span, okay? >> but i think it speaks to the fact that let's be honest. inauguration speeches are really not memorable. >> but we remember what the first lady wore. >> we'll talk about that more coming up. still ahead, we've been talking about the inauguration, but, of course, at the heart of the inauguration is the next four years. up next, we'll talk with congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz, chair of the democratic national committee. that's straight ahead. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. what i really need is sleep. introducing the ishares core, building blocks for the heart of your portfolio.
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happens, right here, because right here behind me, president obama will take his public oath, beginning his second term as president of the united states. it will happen on martin luther king day, no less. also a second time taking the oath of office in 24 hours. yesterday, the first lady and first daughters looking on, the president made good on a constitutional requirement. that he be sworn in on january 20th, as did vice president joseph biden. looking ahead as to what is happening today, president obama will be publicly sworn in 11:30 eastern and give his presidential address at noon and later in the afternoon, 2:35, he will lead the inaugural parade from the u.s. capitol down pennsylvania avenue to the white house. dan lothian following it all for us this morning. good morning, dan. >> good morning. it will be a busy day for the president today, after a busy weekend of a number of events. the president officially getting sworn in yesterday.
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but he begins the day today, about 8:45 this morning, heading across the street to the st. john's episcopal church, also known as the church of presidents where the first family has attended services in the past. two hours after that he will head to capitol hill for the swearing in of the president and vice president. the president will deliver his inaugural address. aides and other who's are familiar with the president's remarks say it will be a hopeful speech. not one of policy. where the president will point out every not every problem or difference can be settled in washington, lawmakers, and the white house can look at areas of agreement. and the president will talk about big challenges ahead as well. the president faces tough issues in his second term, dealing with gun control, figuring out the whole debt ceiling issue, and also immigration reform. something that the president said would be a top priority.
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so a lot of different events for the president today. capping it off will be two balls. on official inaugural ball and the commander in chief ball taking place tonight. key folks will be taking part in ceremonies today. in particular, some hispanics playing an important role. chief justice sonja sotomayor, takie ing place on the swearing of the president. the inaugural committee has chosen a cuban american to read an original poem. cuban american civil jeer and author, richard blanco. so hispanics playing an important role on an important day in washington. john. >> a long day of firsts and a long day of celebration. dan lothian at the white house
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this morning. the crowd expected to turn up at the national mall, not expected to be as large as four years ago, when 1.8 million people crowded into the city. they are still expecting some 800,000 people today. nothing to thumb your nose at. christi paul on the national mall where crowds are gathering. >> they are gathering and dressed to impress and to stay warm. no doubt that things have definitely picked up in the last half hour, so we've seen a lot more people. with me now is 10-year-old mari and her mom michelle who feels a special kinship with michelle obama and mckenna as well. mari, ten yearsed old. you moved from california a couple of years ago, what do you want to see today? >> inside the white house. >> reporter: you want to see inside the white house? >> you think that's going to happen? >> yes. >> they got on the train at 3:30
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this morning and wasn't too bad? >> nope, wasn't bad at all. hardly any people there. >> you have a trek back? >> no, not looking forward to it. >> has to get the kids back for school. and three hours away once you get off the metro in alexandria? >> near virginia beach. >> if you could ask malia or sasha anything, what would you ask? >> what is the favorite thing about the white house. >> reporter: so many questions kids want to ask the kids of the white house. one thing so interest to see, people taking pictures with their ipads all over the place down here. back to you. >> christi, so many people from so many places on the mall yesterday, mississippi, louisiana, nebraska, boston, all over the country to join in the celebration this weekend. an exciting time for so many people. christi paul, great to see you.
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i want to turn to soledad o'brien on the west part of the capitol. >> after the inaugural balls tonight, down to business. first up, working on gun control legislation. let's talk about the challenges the president will face ahead with congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz, attended vice president biden's swearing in yesterday. dan lothian mentioning a moment ago, a first with an hispanic supreme court justice doing the swearing in. what it was like? >> warm and intimate, really classic vice president biden. he was really just thrilled to be re-inaugurated. a privilege to be there. >> did it feel like an historic moment? i spoke with justice sotomayor a couple of days before. she almost couldn't believe --
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two things stunning her. that she was a supreme court justice and she would get the honor of swearing in the vice president. and both seemed improbable considering where she came from. >> you could see how thrilled she was. it was incredible to be there, to witness history, and to see the opportunity for women, you know, just the historic nature of a woman swearing in a vice president and the first hispanic. it was really remarkable. >> the nation is divided. polls show the nation is divided. i'm sure you feel it in the halls of congress. what does the president have to say. and to make your job the next day easier for you and your colleagues on the other side of the aisle? >> i think what the president's goal will be this morning is to try to use the inaugural address to unify the country. to talk about how we need to find common ground and there are really are more similarities than differences. and we should start this new
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term with the goal of trying to put aside the really divisive politics of the past, and polarization is not what the american people voted for. they want to make sure we address the real serious challenges we're facing. my way or the highway needs to be put aside. and we have to recognize starting tomorrow that our challenges are significant, and we can each give up a little, and it's okay. you know, that's not loss. that's actually the way things should get done in this country. >> sounds so easy when you say it, yet we have talked many times. where is your seat? right now, for folks who can't see our vantage point, right at the capitol, so 1,600 people who have the best tickets are sitting right here. are whe where are you? >> members of congress file in here, and right in there.
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>> right at the front. >> pretty close. >> debbie wasserman schultz, chair of the democratic national committee from florida. and when the president was sworn in, he used a bible handed down by michelle obama's family. today, the president will be using two historic bibles. first used by abraham lincoln. the lincoln family bible was in illinois at the time. mr. obama used the same bible when he took the oath of office in 2009. the president will be sworn in using what is described as dr. martin luther king's personal bible. it traveled with dr. king when he traveled across our nation. and performing, of course, is an honor. the ultimate honor for any kind of band. repeat performance for the isirettes. this iowa drill team features
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fancy foot work. they performed for senator obama at a 2000 campaign event, and earned an invitation to his first inauguration. and they say it means a lot to be asked back. >> to be able to do it a second time, that means he understood us on a personal way and it's just -- it's mesmerizing. >> yes, nice to be asked back yet again. and this morning, showing you scenes from washington, d.c., and the astronauts on board the international space station will have this view of the inauguration. the iss crew members captured these images of washington, d.c. yesterday. it shows the potomac, and where the inauguration will be held. coming up, james clyburn will talk about the significance of the president's inauguration, happening today, which is martin
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welcome back. a beautiful picture of the capitol, which is where we are this morning. special inauguration coverage. i'm soledad o'brien. let's get to james clyburn, veteran of the civil rights movement to talk about inauguration day. >> nice to be here. >> our pleasure. we've heard about the two tables th bibles that president obama will be sworn in with. i'm curious to know what you think about the cyclical nature. 50 years ago, march on washington, 50 years later, a black president is being sworn in for a second term. do you -- >> right. >> is it an indication that there have been some big steps toward progress in this country? >> sure. sure. big steps. but many, many steps left to go. all of us are aware that this
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president came into office, like the 40th year, and a whole lot of things haven't happened, and he is -- he has been met with some really tough times. not just the reaction to him, but because of the challenges that the country faces and i believe that so much of what president obama has confronted was forecast by martin luther king jr. >> what do you mean? >> take health care, for instance. to me, one of the most important speeches ever made by king had to do with health care, and he said in the speech, of all of the injustices that exist in america, the most egg ridregiou all is the lack of health care. i think with president obama tackling health care the way he did, and one of the reasons we
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talked about him, he had to go forward. >> many people like to focus on the content of character part of his speeches, a lot of that particular speech as you know was about economic justice. >> absolutely. >> you think about economic justice, jobs for african-americans, unemployment, much higher than it is for white and latino counterparts. what has to be done in the second term that will change the numbers? obviously not just for black people, but for everybody? >> the president looking at recent supreme court decisions, we have to find creative ways to make the economy work for all citizens. by that i mean, the president put in the stimulus package the 10, 20, 30 formula for the rural development. we need to take that formula and put it in all parts of grant so that at least 10% of the money
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can get into those community with 20% or more of the populations are locked beneath the poverty level for the last 30 years. that's the creative approach that i think has to be made. we know that supreme court is finding a lot of so-called affirmative action programs. >> there was a photo that showed a lot of people that work closely with the president. and i know have you seen this photo. mostly white guys. i think we can see valerie jarrett's leg and a photo sent out to show all the president's men and women were working hard over the christmas break to try to resolve the fiscal crisis that we were in. but another message was, wow, for the first black president, not a particularly diverse cabinet. >> yeah, i have seen that photo, and a lot of us were bothered by it. not so much because of the photo itself, because those of us who work with the white house, we know that it was a one snapshot
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that did not really dictate the white house in substance, but symbolically, we have to be very aware that people all over the world are watching these kinds of things and i think we have to make sure that the programs measure up to the promise. >> thank you for having me. >> you bet. ahead this morning, we will talk with singer/songwriter legend. we'll talk to him about what he's hoping hear when the president makes his inaugural address. a lot of his focus on the war on drugs. we'll explain, a moment. obligations, but obligations. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. what i really need is sleep. introducing the ishares core, building blocks for the heart of your portfolio. find out why 9 out of 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus which includes
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welcome to our special coverage of the president inauguration. grammy award winner john legend is in town for the inauguration. performed over the weekend. he is also here to promote his new film that takes a hard look at the war on drugs. i spoke to him about that on saturday. what are you hoping from a second term from president obama? >> i think the recovery needs to be stronger. because there are still too many people unemployed.
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we need to still focus on growth, i think a lot of washington is talking about cutting, and talking about balancing budgets, but i think we're still in a place where we're still recovering from a very deep recession and i think we need to focus on making sure we have more opportunity. more jobs, for so many people out there suffering. >> you are executive producer of the film. it's really told through the story that eugene knew through his childhood and told about the racial disparities. >> this is an issue that elites can usually ignore, it's not around them, somebody else's problem. he wanted to bring it closer. >> hnatiw jenner was like a second mother to me she worked for our family, she was never a nanny. >> tell me the story of her son, james, that unfolds as the movie goes along. >> she said something that broke my heart. after all this hard work, i feel
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like i'm the first generation of black americans whose children are worse off than before. >> plenty of people who have said and continue to say, listen, drug issues are about personal responsibility. you know, why would you not blame someone like her son, who was doing drugs? >> there are personal choices. people make choices to do drugs, however, black people aren't making more choices than other people in this country. but getting locked up at a dramatic higher rate than other people in this country. not only personal choices, but policy choices that our government has made that have systematically disadvantaged brach and brown people and poor people in the country. >> when there are not a lot of resources out here and teachers around stressing to come to school, you won't go to school, you will sell drugs. >> it's a crime against humanity
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to do it as we are doing, and i hope president obama in the second term, i hope in a way he understand there is a moment here for the country's legacy, let alone his own legacy to move into the post civil rights era and rescue us from the terrible inhumanity to man. >> if you think about it, all -- all washington talking about it right now, is how do we cut costs? let's think about one of the most expensive useless things we've done, wage this war on drugs. >> it's failed. >> we've ruined lives, and everybody is still using drugs the same amount as before. >> what's the solution? >> war on drugs must end. primary human rights issue facing us in the united states. facing our own people and john's words carry the hopes of a better america as we look to the next four years. >> have you a song and in the
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video, it's so powerful. because it's beautiful, the pictures we are seeing are terrible. ♪ the house i live in the friends that i have found folks beyond the railroad ♪ >> the juxtaposition, we have that concept, this ideal, what we think america is, but we are the most incarcerated country in the world. the land of the free, and we lock people up more than anybody. >> that was the writer and director eugene dreke and john legend, one of the executive producers on the film "the house i live in." the entire video, leased exclusively to cnn if to cnn.com/startingpt. katy perry rocking the red, white, and blue, and it's only the beginning. more on that when we come back. [ female announcer ] what if the next big thing, isn't a thing at all?
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the focus is on the ceremony and parade, but tonight it's about the parties, stevie wonder, alicia keys, all expected to perform. the celebration somewhat scaled back from four years ago. just two official inaugural balls this year, compared to the ten in 2009. brett coburn is joining us. you are sort of the mr. logistics. what is different in addition to a scaled-down number of balls. what else has changed? >> second inaugurals tend to be a little smaller, but a really important moment. important for the president to look back as to where we've gone as a country. a lot of great events over today. a great weekend. two balls tonight, one of which is the commander in chiefs ball, a tradition started by george w.
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bush, and a great way for us to say thank you to our men and women in uniform. >> and the two you are having is almost like ten. something like 40,000 people going. >> that's right. second inaugural, a lot of us worked on the first and learned some lessons. by having a centralized event, a larger, centralized event, we can get more out of the talent. instead of being stuck in one ball, you will be able to see an entire night of programming tonight, great folks have come together to celebrate the country and celebrate the president's second inauguration. >> talk about the money. it has to be sensitive. >> sure. a lot of resources go into this. not just from the presidential inaugural committee. opening up the mall. paying for things like the commander in chief's ball. takes resources. a lot of folks have come together and we'll have the money we need to have a great day. >> based on donations? >> there are some tax dollars
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that go into the ceremony itself and some of the security. but all of the events, the parade, all of the balls, the celebratory events paid through private donations, including the day of service on saturday. a great event. >> a fantastic event. some 10,000 people came through. i was amazed, kudos to you, logistics, so calm. >> our military partner plays such a big part. members of congress and chuck schumer, a great leader. what people have to remember is really only the swearing in itself is what's required by the constitution. the rest of these are traditions started by different presidents. one of the traditions was this day of service which brings us back to martin luther king day, which we are celebrating. and we had folks in all 50 states, staff in all 50 states organizing service events and over 200,000 americans come out and serve

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